The Modern Civil Rights Movement

108 Words1 Pages
A movement, whether political, civil, or even religious, can only change a country if that movement changes the people’s hearts and minds, not just the laws in place. Within the United States, the modern civil rights movement, looking at it from the beginning in 1945 till the late 1960s, was necessary for the rights of African Americans to be fully acknowledged; to be treated equal, without separation. It was only through the passages and enforcement of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965 that protection for all American citizens became prevalent throughout. Before the sixties, there were a multitude of challenges faced